
Reckitt strikes deal worth up to £3.6bn to sell Cillit Bang business
Reckitt will keep a 30% stake in the essential home business after the sale, with up to 1.3 billion dollars (£968 million) deferred under the deal.
It will offload six factories, including a site in Derby, to Advent under the deal.
The firm will also book around 800 million dollars (£596 million) in costs for splitting out the essential home division from the rest of the business.
It expects to complete the deal by the end of the year.
Kris Licht, Reckitt chief executive, said: 'We are executing our strategic plan at pace.
'The divestment of Essential Home represents a significant step forward in unlocking the substantial value in our business.
'This moves Reckitt towards becoming a simpler, more effective world-class consumer health and hygiene company and it will enable us to focus on a core portfolio of high-growth, high-margin power brands.'
It put the essential home division, which accounts for about 14% of group net revenues, up for sale last summer as part of a major overhaul.
Mr Licht has been leading a plan to restructure Reckitt, unveiling aims last year to spin off its baby formula business, Mead Johnson, and sell the essential home division to focus on 'power brands', such as Durex condoms, Gaviscon antacid and Strepsils lozenges.
The essential home business delivered around £2 billion of net revenues in 2024 and it made underlying earnings of £486 million in the year to March.
Reckitt said the sale would help further boost shareholder returns, with it set to pay out a 2.2 billion dollar (£1.6 billion) special dividend to investors.
The group added it plans to offset the costs of spinning off the division under wider aims to cut costs across the firm.
Shares in Reckitt lifted 2% in morning trading on Friday.
Ranjan Sen, managing partner of Advent said: 'The carve-out represents a unique opportunity to create a focused, scaled platform of globally recognised home care brands that operate in attractive categories.
'We are confident we can build on the portfolio's strong foundations to drive operational excellence and unlock the brands' full potential.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Powys County Times
13 hours ago
- Powys County Times
Cadbury to release Dairy Milk Lotus Biscoff Advent Calendar
Cadbury is set to launch an "indulgent" new Advent calendar in 2025 that has already begun to cause a stir among shoppers. The confectionery company is responsible for a range of popular chocolates, including Freddos, Boost, Crunchie, Creme Eggs and the classic Dairy Milk. It is also well-known for Christmas treats, including Roses, Cadbury Coins and Mini Snowballs chocolate bars. Cadbury set to release new Advent calendar Earlier this year, Cadbury teamed up with Lotus to release a brand new Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff chocolate bar. The chocolate proved popular, with shoppers describing it as "the stuff of dreams". It features crunchy Lotus Biscoff biscuit pieces, all wrapped in Cadbury's "signature" Dairy Milk chocolate. Now, Cadbury is set to release a new Dairy Milk Lotus Biscoff Chocolate Chunk Advent Calendar (236g). The calendar will feature: 12 x chunks of Dairy Milk chocolate 12 x chunks of Dairy Milk chocolate filled with Lotus Biscoff pieces and spread Shoppers have already taken to social media to share their excitement about the new Cadbury Advent calendar. One person, posting on Facebook group Newfoodsuk, said: "I might be 32 by time Christmas comes but I'll be highly disappointed to not receive this on December 1st." Another added: "My only requirement this year!" A third chocolate lover commented: "I know what advent calendar I want this year While this person posted: "You best believe this will be the first Christmas purchase I make." The new Advent calendar is set to be part of several new Cadbury releases in the lead up to Christmas 2025, according to The Grocer. Other new products will include: Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff tablet (350g) Two new Toblerone Truffles - Golden Caramel and Assorted (Dark, Golden Caramel, White and Milk) Oreo Assortments Cadbury is also set to roll out 'stunning new designs' for its Roses and Heroes chocolates in September. Senior brand manager for Christmas at Mondelez International, Nicole Partridge, said: "This Christmas we're extending our successful partnership with Lotus Biscoff even further, introducing our second piece of NPD with our new Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff Advent Calendar, the most indulgent way to count down to the big day. "Our hugely successful Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff bars are also expanding into a new, larger gifting format, as they're simply too delicious to be enjoyed alone." Discontinued UK chocolates and sweets Where to get the new Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff Advent Calendar Currently, the new Cadbury Dairy Milk Lotus Biscoff Advent Calendar is only available on the Cadbury Gifts website. However, the Advent calendar is expected to be available in supermarkets across the UK from September, according to The Grocer. Although Christmas is still about five months away, the first Christmas chocolate of 2025 has already been spotted. Cadbury Mini Snowballs chocolate bars were found in Asda by Newfoodsuk, much to the excitement of shoppers. While Mars has also released its first Christmas-themed chocolates of 2025, with Gingerbread Flavour Maltesers Reindeer spotted on Morrisons' website (£1 for one or £2 for a 5-pack).


The Sun
2 days ago
- The Sun
Cadbury launching new Christmas advent calendar in weeks based on iconic breakfast spread
CADBURY is launching a new Christmas advent calendar in weeks - and it's based on an iconic breakfast spread. The chocolatier is set to unveil the Dairy Milk Lotus Biscoff calendar at major retailers in September. The 236g box, which comes with a recommended selling price of £7.79, contains 12 plain Dairy Milk chunks and 12 featuring crunchy Lotus Biscoff pieces and Biscoff spread. Cadbury is also launching a Dairy Milk Biscoff 350g sharing tablet for a recommended selling price of £5.83. Both products will hit supermarket in September, ahead of the festive season, The Grocer reports. Mondelez, which owns Cadbury, has also reportedly said it will roll out new designs for its Cadbury Roses and Heroes next month. Two new Toblerone Truffles flavours will launch as well - Golden Caramel and Assorted - with a recommended selling price of £6.75. The Sun has asked Mondelez which retailers the new Dairy Milk Biscoff products will be available at and their calorie information and will update this story when we have heard back. Their launch comes amid a busy period for the giant chocolate company which has unveiled a swathe of new items recently. Bournville Salted Caramel and Bournville Chopped Hazelnut started landing on supermarket shelves at the end of July. Shoppers can buy both never-before-seen flavours for £2.20 or £1.85 with a Nectar Card. Meanwhile, it brought out Dairy Milk Iced Latte in May, combining classic Dairy Milk chocolate with a creamy coffee filling and crunchy biscuit pieces. Dubai Ice Cream The brand also introduced four limited edition Dairy Milk summer edition bars with packaging that changes colour based on temperature. Shoppers have also been going wild for the limited edition Cadbury Twirl White Dipped that's been landing on shelves. The bars, branded "outstanding" by customers, are similar to the classic milk chocolate Twirl but with a white chocolate coating. However, not all recent news from the brand has been positive. Cadbury axed its Bournville fingers earlier this year despite rave reviews from customers. The crispy biscuits were a popular item within the Bournville range, which features dark chocolate products. But they were confirmed as discontinued in June after their launch just five years ago in October 2020. In other new chocolate news, Nestle recently brought out Milkybar Crispy Cookie sharing bags for £2. Two new KitKat Chunky bars hit shelves last month too - Chunky Funky and Salted Caramel. How to save money on chocolate We all love a bit of chocolate from now and then, but you don't have to break the bank buying your favourite bar. Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how to cut costs... Go own brand - if you're not too fussed about flavour and just want to supplant your chocolate cravings, you'll save by going for the supermarket's own brand bars. Shop around - if you've spotted your favourite variety at the supermarket, make sure you check if it's cheaper elsewhere. Websites like let you compare prices on products across all the major chains to see if you're getting the best deal. Look out for yellow stickers - supermarket staff put yellow, and sometimes orange and red, stickers on to products to show they've been reduced. They usually do this if the product is coming to the end of its best-before date or the packaging is slightly damaged. Buy bigger bars - most of the time, but not always, chocolate is cheaper per 100g the larger the bar. So if you've got the appetite, and you were going to buy a hefty amount of chocolate anyway, you might as well go bigger. .


Times
3 days ago
- Times
Bidding war for Spectris cranks up with sweetened Advent offer
The bidding war for the FTSE 250 company Spectris has intensified after its board recommended an improved offer from Advent International, the American private equity firm. Advent has agreed a sweetened £41 per share cash offer for Spectris, an instrumentation and testing group, including an interim dividend of 28p per share, valuing the company at £4.2 billion. That trumps a £40 a share offer from KKR, a rival American private equity firm, which Spectris's board had recommended to shareholders on July 2. 'The Spectris directors intend to unanimously recommend that Spectris shareholders vote in favour of the … increased Advent offer,' the company said. Spectris, advised by Goldman Sachs, Rothschild and Bank of America Securities, said that it was a 2.5 per cent increase to the KKR offer, meaning that Spectris shareholders would receive an additional £1 per share, or £101.5 million combined. It also represents a premium of 101.2 per cent to Spectris's share price on June 6, before the offer period began. Advent, which is headquartered in Boston, had initially offered £37.63 per share. Shares in Spectris closed up 2.2 per cent, or 88p, at £40.78 on the London Stock Exchange. KKR said it was 'considering its position and a further announcement will be made when appropriate'. It added: 'Spectris shareholders are strongly advised to take no action in response to the revised Advent offer in the meantime.' Spectris employs 7,600 people and provides instruments, test equipment and software for industrial applications. The group is one of a number of technology specialists to attract takeover interest from American private equity firms this year, with Oxford Ionics, a quantum computing start-up, and Alphawave IP Group, the manufacturer of high-speed connectivity and computer silicon, also receiving bids. In a note to clients after KKR's offer last month, Tom Fraine, an equity analyst at Shore Capital, said 'public investors clearly won't value this business as highly as private investors'. Fraine said: 'It is very disappointing that the UK stock market isn't giving these companies the kind of valuations they deserve, and that's resulted in a record number of takeovers over the past couple of years, which are going through at near all-time high premiums as well. Premiums have typically been around 60 per cent.' • How to save London's stock market, by LSE boss David Schwimmer Graham Simpson, an analyst on Canaccord Genuity's Quest team, had said UK stocks had been 'trading on an extreme discount' for five years because businesses like Spectris remained 'relatively obscure to institutional investors' who sometimes lacked 'a clear understanding of core operations'.